MSI has launched its own version of the GTX 750 and the GTX 750 Ti which will be a part of MSI's Gaming Series lineup. With 55W and 60W TDPs and compact size, these two cards should be ideal for building small gaming stations or multimedia PCs, according to MSI.

As a part of the Gaming series, both the new MSI GTX 750 Gaming and the GTX 750 Ti Gaming will feature the same Twin Frozr IV dual fan design as well as Military Class Technology including Hi-C Caps, Solid Caps and SSCs. The GTX 750 Ti Gaming is equipped with 2GB of GDDR5 memory clocked at 5400MHz, packs 640 CUDA cores while the GTX 750 has 1GB of GDDR5 memory clocked at 5010MHz and 512 CUDA cores. Both cards share the same 128-bit memory interface as well as same GPU base and Boost clocks set at 1085MHz and 1163MHz.

The good side of the story is that since both of the new graphics cards have below 60W TPD, they lack PCI-Express power connectors and draw all their power from the PCI-Express bus.

The suggested retail price for the GTX 750 and the GTX 750 Ti is set at US $119 and US $149 but we guess that MSI's Gaming Series will have a slight premium.

MSI has surprised us with the new teaser on its Facebook site showing two new upcoming members of its Gaming Series lineup, the new Mini-ITX Z87 based mini-ITX motherboard and the new mini-ITX GTX 780 graphics card.

Although MSI did not release any specific details regarding the upcoming MSI Z87 based Mini-ITX Gaming motherboard, it appears to be quite similar to MSI's already available Z87I motherboard. Of course, the new mini-ITX Z87 Gaming has a beefier VRM, and quite a few extras including the USB DAC Power, Audio Boost, and Killer E2200 Gigabit Ethernet.

As we can see from the picture, the new Mini-ITX Gaming series motherboard features two DDR3 DIMM slot, single PCI-Express 3.0 x16 slot in case you want to pair it up with the new mini-ITX GTX 760 Gaming graphics card, five SATA 6Gbps ports, bunch of USB 3.0/2.0 ports, integrated WiFi and will probably pack some MSI Gaming features like MSI Gaming Device Port, OC Genie 4.

As far as the new Mini-ITX GTX 760 is concerned, MSI also did not shed much details regarding but according to the picture, it will feature a dual-slot cooler with a single fan. It will need a single 8-pin PCI-Express power connector and will be shorter than usual GTX 760 graphics cards, or short enough to fit on mini-ITX motherboard.

Both products look quite interesting and we are sure that these will be a great foundation for some impressive future mini-PC gaming systems.

Making the day a bit more interesting, Corsair has decided to roll out its new power supply line, the Gaming series. The new Gaming series have 80Plus certification and will be avialable as a 600, 700 and 800W version.

All three PSUs are non-modular, support ATX12V 2.3 standard, have sleeved cables and are cooled by a 140mm double ball-bearing temperature set fan. The blades of fan are transparent and can be illuminated at the request by three-color LEDs, so you can end up with either blue, red or white color. The entire Gaming series PSU has a single +12V rail peaking at 65Amps for the 800W version.

The MTBF is rated at 100,000 hours and all three are backed by three years of warranty. The MSRP for the Gaming series starts at US $99.99 for the 600W model, US $109.99 for the 700W and ends up at US $119.99 for the 800W model.